Affiliation:
1. Department of Radiation Oncology University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham Alabama USA
2. Department of Radiation Oncology Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University Atlanta Georgia USA
3. Section of Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiology Emory University Atlanta Georgia USA
Abstract
AbstractIntroductionCardiac radioablation (CR) is a noninvasive treatment option for patients with refractory ventricular tachycardia (VT) during which high doses of radiation, typically 25 Gy, are delivered to myocardial scar. In this study, we investigate motion from cardiac cycle and evaluate the dosimetric impact in a cohort of patients treated with CR.MethodsThis retrospective study included eight patients treated at our institution who had respiratory‐correlated and ECG‐gated 4DCT scans acquired within 2 weeks of CR. Deformable image registration was applied between maximum systole (SYS) and diastole (DIAS) CTs to assess cardiac motion. The average respiratory‐correlated CT (AVGresp) was deformably registered to the average cardiac (AVGcardiac), SYS, and DIAS CTs, and contours were propagated using the deformation vector fields (DVFs). Finally, the original treatment plan was recalculated on the deformed AVGresp CT for dosimetric assessment.ResultsMotion magnitudes were measured as the mean (SD) value over the DVFs within each structure. Displacement during the cardiac cycle for all chambers was 1.4 (0.9) mm medially/laterally (ML), 1.6 (1.0) mm anteriorly/posteriorly (AP), and 3.0 (2.8) mm superiorly/inferiorly (SI). Displacement for the 12 distinct clinical target volumes (CTVs) was 1.7 (1.5) mm ML, 2.4 (1.1) mm AP, and 2.1 (1.5) SI. Displacements between the AVGresp and AVGcardiac scans were 4.2 (2.0) mm SI and 5.8 (1.4) mm total. Dose recalculations showed that cardiac motion may impact dosimetry, with dose to 95% of the CTV dropping from 27.0 (1.3) Gy on the AVGresp to 20.5 (7.1) Gy as estimated on the AVGcardiac.ConclusionsCardiac CTV motion in this patient cohort is on average below 3 mm, location‐dependent, and when not accounted for in treatment planning may impact target coverage. Further study is needed to assess the impact of cardiac motion on clinical outcomes.
Subject
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Instrumentation,Radiation
Cited by
5 articles.
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